The Era Of The Flying Car Has Finally Arrived

Not 140 characters. Screenshot via Terrafugia Peter Thiel is wrong. His famous comment on the failed promise of the internet — "We wanted flying cars, instead we got 140 characters" — is about to be upended as the first actual flying cars take to the roads and skies.

Bloomberg reported on the progress of the biggest name in the flying car business, Terrafugia, which is nearing the culmination of a decade-long effort to build, drive, fly, market and, yes, sell flying cars to the dreamers who have always wanted them.

OK, the Terrafugia Transition is more of a roadable airplane than a flying car. But as Terrafugia founder Carl Dietrich notes in the Bloomberg profile by Josh Dean, that's a market that's crying out to be served:

Critics say flying cars are unlikely to be both great airplanes and great automobiles. But that misses the point, says Dietrich, who explains the Transition is intended to expand the definition of an airplane, solving a number of persistent problems in the process.

The Transition is a versatile vehicle, as flying cars go. It runs on regular gas and can be parked in a regular garage, and it provides the flexibility to fly when the weather is good and drive when it isn't, as Dean points out.

At about $280,o0o, it's priced in the ballpark of some exotic supercars. So it could be a very cool toy, but there's also a business case: If you need to cover a lot of ground in a short period of time, the Transition unlocks America's underused network of small, regional airfields.

So Thiel is right: We have had to get by with 140 characters of innovation, to this point.

But the flying cars we always wanted are finally coming. And if Thiel wants to get a "light sport aircraft" license and is willing put down a $10,000 deposit, he can both have one — and fly it.